APPENDIX A.—REPUTED DISCOVERIES. 103 
Kilrannoch, between Glen Prosen and Glen Callater. Dr. 
Graham estimated the hill at 3200 feet. It was pointed out to 
me by a shepherd from the head of Canlochen Glen, and at that 
distance I pea it scarcely above 3000 feet.” Watson, Cyb. 
rit., i., p. 20 
The plant aii grows there—but the elevation is only abou 
2700 feet—and is native, as it is on Hobcarten fell, Cimbecland. 
It is one of Don’s indisputable discoveries. 
Hypericum barbatum, /acq. 
“By the side of a hedge, near the wood a eee 
Strathearn, Bike Mr. G. Don.” Smith, Eng. Bot 
886 ; ld, Eng. Pi. in. p.420- 
The specimens sent by him were in a sufficiently fresh state 
to be drawn for Eng. 
“We do not BE, ee this species was pas wild in 
Scotland.” Hooker and Arnott, Brit. Fl., Ed. vi. 
“In English Flora, Smith accepts this as a = ue native, and 
without a word of doubt ; attributing it to ‘bushy places in 
Scotland’ as though there were any number of eee a8 it 
in addition to the one cea e Se iemarrse by the of a 
€ i n. Smith w 
bb also o Cyb. Brit., ee! 254. 
‘Perthshire, Sas never confirmed.” Hooker, Student's F1. 
(1870), p. 476. 
“No one has found it since; and if it ever occurred there it 
was doubtless an escape from ‘cultivation, as it is most unlikely 
that an Austrian plant, not occurring in Scandinavia, France, 
or North Germany, could be wild in Ste “ ae Eng. 
Bot., ii., p. 160. Se Bi Babington, Man., Ed. vii., 
specimen is in Herb. Palmer. Don ae ts it as 
described by him, but only as an escape from 5 aan It 
belongs to the same grade of citizenship as 1. hircinu 
Potentilla tridentata, Av. 
“ Justly reckoned by Mr. ee among the most beautiful of 
its genus, he at thered him] on a mountain called Werron 
i usshir » esl Bot., t. 2389. Jd. in Trans. Linn. 
" os a mountain ieee Werron, and some other hill in 
Angusshire to the westward, Mr.G. Don.” Smith, Eng FL, ii., 
P. 424. 
